Monday, 22 September 2008

Beehives and Keynotes

Once you get through the sales pitch to the shareholders and wall street analysts we get to the meat of this mornings key note  - the announcement of Oracle Beehive a new updated version of Collaboration Suite.  Oracle demonstrated the product to me while I worked at DFID back in 2004.

All in all it looks a great product, it is based upon open standards it should be possible to link it in to existing infrastructure. I'll try and find out more about the product of the next few days - in particular what is different between Beehive and the old Collaboration suite.

Web 2.0 and Oracle

One of the uncomfortable truths for Oracle is that the Web 2.0 world runs on MYSQL.

There a undoubted problems with this but when Digg, Yahoo  and Google use the LAMP stack to build and deploy large scale performant applications which require no direct licence payment - idea for cash limited startups.

As programs such as Twitter becomes moneytisied by being deployed into companies as collaboration tools, they will come with MYSQL - not Oracle. This could be a major threat as DBA become use to supporting MYSQL and the bottom line costs become significantly cheaper, CIO & CTO become more aware of use of OS solutions.  

DICOM support in Oracle 11g - Case study Novartis.

It takes 15  years to develop new drugs. Companies want to improve the critical path. From the compound selection to its final certification for clinical use.

The use of imaging is becoming more critical to show success of new drugs as they show the effects of the trial drugs quicker than traditional physical diagnostics.

Hospitals become part of the trail and are contracted as 3rd parties. They take modiality scans of patients during the trial and send scans back to the drug company for study management.

The key challenges the companies have when trying to manage the trails evidence using medical images include:

  • No single RIS / PACS are hospital centric, no workflow quality management  solution
  • Data Access and Control
  • No easy access to data for follow up after initial work
  • Scattered environment , prop images
  • Data transfer
  • No single standards, no audit trail, patient confidentially ,
  • data

Novartis upgraded to 11g in 2008 

Images are directed as an object in the DB. Its no longer a blob. Data does not need to be parses, so file infrastructure is not needed. The DB manages the archive as part its data life cycle.

Future a requirements is for the support of a flexible  DICOM dictionary - managed through the database metadata service.

The development of a data quality rules through a XML schema. This would include image level rules, content of images, audit. This can then be brought

Sunday, 4 May 2008

Bread

Did anyone know that Bread can be made at home in a Machine! The last I heard to make bread you combined the floor, water and yeast then beat the hell out the dough, let it swell and then cook.

Well since yesterday we now have machine in the kitchen, awaiting the first deposit of ingredients. We had  false start yesterday when I confirmed that I'd picked up the skimmed milk - I failed to hear the question was 'powdered milk'.

Still I've popped out this morning (still managing to avoiding looking at the front of newspapers) and purchased the powdered milk so I'm now expectingly awaiting my first slice of machine generated bread.

As an experiment I'm in bed writing this short post on my iPod touch.
Not a lot to say as I've just woken up.

Saturday, 3 May 2008

Meet to new boss same as the old boss

Well London has spoken, and Comrade Ken has lost his first election. I've never been a 100% committed Kenster, epically as he went against a promise  not to stand in 2000 against the Labour Party, if he wasn't the official candidate.

So lets hope Boris doesn't throw the baby out with the bath water and try and put a right wing stamp upon London, but somehow something tells me everything has  everything is about to change.

Monday, 28 April 2008

Inlaws Siege Update

When coming back from darkest Kent on Sunday I got a gargled message saying my Mother in Law had been evacuated by armed police due to my Father in law running amok. This is what happens when you rely upon a 10 year talking a phone message and allowing the wife to get the completely wrong end of the stick when he passes the message on and she can't make contact with her parents. Now I know Tom's home brew is a bit on the wild side but I couldn't quite believe that Tom would snap and then start waving a sword around at his age.

In actual fact both of my in laws had been asked to stay at their sisters home while a mini armed siege developed in a house a few doors down. Anyway full(er) details can be seen here: Armed excitement in Carlton in Lindrick.

Twitter...hum

For the last few weeks I've been using twitter to update my Facebook status. For those who don't know what twitter is asks the simple questions: what are you doing? then allowing you only 140 characters to reply! The ui is simple, a text box and an update button.

Twitter has been described as  Micro blogging  using the discipline of the small message size found in SMS combined with the user interactivity of IM. What's clever is that twitter allows you to follow other users (or twitters) feeds. This creates a dynamic community of short posts, with the twitters you follow updating their feeds in almost real time. You can pose questions to your followers and post directly to other users.

A community of sites has built up as an eco system of complentary sites.  Twitter hasn't yet really taken of on this side of the Atlantic compared to the US, where some of the Web 2.0 hero's can claim upwards of 20000 followers. I currently have 10 followers and follow 20 or so. I've struggled to convince friends to take it up but I'm sure in a few months it will be the 'site de jour'.

One of the challenges with technologies such as Twitter is the ability to build an application that unexpectedly capture the moment and have to scale to massive volumes. Twitter uses the LAMP technology stack so the db layer is MYSQL which is being see very heavy db writes to support the application. I'm not sure that currently MSSQL has the answers for providing this sort of scalability and responsiveness. Oracle has Times Ten (in memory single process space) or Coherence (multi process scalability). Although some users have 20000 followers the big challenge will be when a major celeb like a Paris Hilton starts using Twitter and draws in hundred's of thousands of followers.

Kevin Rose said that Digg.com was built originally to support 100k hits per month - currently they have had to scale the web site to manage  25 million unique hits per month. That means that all the original code has been replaced, at the same time limiting the length of time the site is unavailable as the upgrades are slipped in. Infrastructure technologies such as 'grid' and services such as Amazon S3 mean that Web 2.0 start ups do not need put all their startup capital into datacentres and infrastructure, but the underlying architecture and software design still has to take this into account. One of the major reasons for the failure of .com fashion retailer Boo.com, was the need to procure and build an infrastructure that had to support hugely optimistic visitor and sales numbers predicted in the initial business case from day one, yet were starting their business from scratch with much lower numbers visitor numbers.

If Twitter allowed controlled or limited access communities  (like Facebook's networks functionality) the technology could be great in the workplace, but as its currently configured it is not possible to publish sensitive questions to colleagues only which is a major drawback.

My twitter page can be accessed by following the link. Please create an account and join the fun.

Sunday, 27 April 2008

End of Season

Blackheath rugby season came to an end on Saturday, as and usual the end of season festivities went on long into the warm spring evening.

The yesterdays opponents were Manchester, in what, for them, was a must win game in order to guarantee them promotion to National one. For Blackheath the season has drifted since Xmas as our own promotion push faltered. In all truth although our forwards held there own our backs came up short both in defense and attack. Still we have ended the season in 5 place and not had to worry about relegation this year.

After the game, a bbq was rolled out and the beer followed long into the evening. A number of kicking competitions took place on the field while the first team auctioned off their playing shirts. I managed to get my hands our retiring hooker shirt. Lexi had almost 200 caps for the club so I will proudly wear his shirt home and away next year.

img015

Barmy Mark managed a life long ambition of running the score board - however this wasn't till after the game had finished.

Today I'm of the Kent cup final in Cranbrook

Friday, 25 April 2008

Royal Geographic Society

The Sun event took place at the RGS squeezed between Hyde park and Imperial College. Although the outside facade is of a post modern 60's building, once you pass through reception its clearly a Victorian building.

On the wall hang maps original created by English and Dutch cartographers in the 17th Century. In the map room large portraits of Livingstone, Stanley, Cook and Scott adorn the walls.

The lecture hall, had wonderful leather seats with each one marked by a name which I assumed to be name of its associated member.

I'll see if the society is open to the public and suggest that we take the boys for nose round.

Royal Geographic Society

MySQL - Sun take over...

After a hiatus I'm back. I promise to make more effort to keep the blog up to date.

 

This morning I've been at on the 11 world wide events Sun is running to understand the future of MYSQL since Sun competed its acquisition in February.

At least of the healthcare software suppliers is using MYSQL to store documents.

I'm also starting to use the LAMP stack for a website I'm developing at the moment. The database is MYSQL so 

 

Simon Phipps - SUN Open Source envangalist Simon Phipps is the first speaker will it be the cathedral pitch. Of interest is that Simon is English and is a

Simon quoted Gartner who are predicting that within 5 years 90% of commercial software will be based on or be completely opensource. Not sure about this - within the the UK health care market I'm not seeing the suppliers moving in that direction. (That is not say that tech's such apache / java are being shunned by suppliers). The software being built and deployed is not based upon a OS licence.

I've heard Simon talk before and this morning talk wasn't his most convincing - I'm not buying that end of the procurement model, to be replaced by the subscription model.

Richard Mason is next up - he's an salesman who came from MYSQL, with a background in RDBMS. He going to explain why Sun brought MYSQL.

first up - complementary product lines - Sun gets access in new markets such as SME. MYSQL was a 400 man company so Sun will provide the business infrastructure to grow.

Sun putting one billion dollars into LAMP, which Sun believe is into its existing products lines such as Java and Glassfish.

Sun will continue to run MYSQL as  - the product will remain open, multi platform to all market segments. A

New subscription offering 'MYSQL Enterprise' is the moneytised  support offer.

David Axmark is next up, he was one of the founders of MYSQL. It as side project back in the 1996 as side project. He thought it might pay their salaries but he never expected it be sold for a billion dollars.

After reflection it looks like at least in the short term not a lot is going to change. Will Sun make a play the large scale enterprise space currently the home of DB2, Oracle and SQL Server?

Thursday, 7 February 2008

Ding Dong ! That's right, ring those bells its a family success.

Last night my oldest son, joined children from every Greenwich secondary school  in the final of a public speaking completion at Greenwich University. There he stood up and spoke without notes or other prompting for two and half minutes about what it is like having a brother with aspergers to parents, teachers and dignitaries such as the mayor!

Last night was the culmination of series of events over the last few months for Greenwich schools who's pupils have received training in public speaking, with some pupils then selected to represent their schools in at events such as last night.

He was placed at the end of the evening and came home with CASH money which will no doubt be wasted on lollypops and fizzy drinks .

As a point of interest never under estimate the ability of a child to spend money on sweets. A couple of years ago he won £500 at the rugby and frittered the lot on nothing except airfix models and paint over the summer holidays.

Wednesday, 6 February 2008

Lent

A couple of years ago I managed to not drink for the 40 days of Lent.

So after looking at my waist line last night I've decided to try absence again, so since 9:30 the 5th of Feb 2008 I'm not going to drinking anything alcoholic till Easter Sunday. Although I have been told that I can break the fast on Good Friday. Wish me luck

I've also entered a 5000 meter swim in Early April which means I've got face the cold and get back into the pool in the next few days.

Sunday, 3 February 2008

And now a fire

After a couple of trips from the plumbers, the Schlanker clan can return to their high levels of personal hygine as the boiler as associated pipes have now been fixed.

This morning the blue winter sky of Charlton has been dimmed by dark clouds of thick smoke billowing up from a fire by the riverside. This is the second major fire from the same factory in the last three years which is a bit worrying. From what I know of the place, dredgers moor up and discharge sand via massive convayors. This sand is then used for making cement or is loaded on to trains driven away. This site of the fire is next to the route I take on my bike between home and North Greenwich tube so I might have to find another way tomorrow morning!

Blackheath FC take on Westcombe park in the quarters of the Kent cup this afternoon. Hopefully we'll have a better result, than yesterdays shocking events at Twickenham and the woeful display put up by Blackheath's first team against 'Combe in the league last November

Saturday, 2 February 2008

Cold Water

The plumbing has become possessed. Water is now flooding through a bedroom ceiling!

Hot Water

When its a cold winter morn, one of life's smaller luxuries is to slip into a warm relaxing bath. I'm sure you can all picture the seen, you turn on the hot tap, slowly steam fills the bathroom, clouding the shaving mirror as you drag the razor across your chin.

Its time to add the cold, to temper a bath hot enough to cook a lobster...

So how do you react when after turning on the cold tap, you find that water coming out of it is even hotter than the still steaming flow from the hot tap.

Then a family member shouts 'there's steam coming out of the toilet!'

Yes my boiler is trying to ensure that whatever the outside temperature, my house is has the humidity and warmth more usually found on the equator.

Somehow my boiler has created a feed back loop so not only is it heating the water it contains but also the cold water reservoir in the loft, while making sounds like a battleship boiler as it engages the enemy more closely for the last time.

It has now been turned off (so its not going to explode)and until the emergency plumber arrives its going to be cold showers around here. 

Friday, 1 February 2008

Retitled Rebranded and Restarted

Well after the excitement of christmas out of the way and a long hard think about what to do with the blog, I've decided to start it up again.

As well as the geeky stuff, I'll also write about my interest's (Rugby) and social life.